Kikkuli was the
Hurrian "master horse trainer
'assussanni''of the land of
Mitanni" (
LÚ''A-AŠ-ŠU-UŠ-ŠA-AN-NI ŠA'' KUR
URU''MI-IT-TA-AN-NI'') and author of a
chariot
A chariot is a type of cart driven by a charioteer, usually using horses to provide rapid motive power. The oldest known chariots have been found in burials of the Sintashta culture in modern-day Chelyabinsk Oblast, Russia, dated to c. 2000&nbs ...
horse training text written primarily in the
Hittite language (as well as an
Old Indo-Aryan
The Indo-Aryan languages (or sometimes Indic languages) are a branch of the Indo-Iranian languages in the Indo-European language family. As of the early 21st century, they have more than 800 million speakers, primarily concentrated in India, ...
language as seen in numerals and loan-words), dating to the
Hittite New Kingdom (around
1400 BCE). The text is notable both for the information it provides about the development of
Indo-European languages (both
Hittite and the
Hurian) and for its content. The text was inscribed on
cuneiform tablets discovered during excavations of Boğazkale and Ḫattuša in 1906 and 1907.
Content and influence
"Thus speaks Kikkuli, master horse trainer of the land of Mitanni" (''UM.MA Ki-ik-ku-li''
LÚ''A-AŠ-ŠU-UŠ-ŠA-AN-NI ŠA'' KUR
URU''MI-IT-TA-AN-NI'').
Thus begins Kikkuli's text. The text contains a complete prescription for conditioning (exercise and feeding) Hittite war horses over 214 days.
The Kikkuli Text addresses solely the conditioning, not education, of the horse. The Mitannians were acknowledged leaders in horse training and as a result of the horse training techniques learned from Kikkuli, Hittite charioteers forged an empire of the area which is now Turkey, Syria, Lebanon and Northern Iraq. Surprisingly, the regime used 'interval training' techniques similar to those used so successfully by
eventers, endurance riders and others today and whose principles have only been studied by equine sports medicine researchers in the past 30 years. The Kikkuli programme involved "sports medicine" techniques comparable to modern ideas such as the principle of progression, peak loading systems, electrolyte replacement theory,
fartlek training, intervals and repetitions. It was directed at horses with a high proportion of slow-twitch muscle fibres.
As in modern conventional (as opposed to 'interval') training, the Kikkuli horses were stabled, rubbed, washed down with warm water and fed oats, barley and hay at least three times per day. Unlike conventional horse training, the horses were subject to warming down periods. Further, every example of cantering included intermediate pauses to relax the horse partially and as the training advanced the workouts include intervals at the canter. This is on the same level as the Interval training we use in modern times. However, Kikkuli made much use of long periods leading the horses at the trotting and cantering gaits rather than harnessing them to a chariot.
Between 1991 and 1992, Dr A. Nyland, then of the
University of New England University of New England may refer to:
* University of New England (Australia), in New South Wales, with about 18,000 students
* University of New England (United States), in Biddeford, Maine, with about 3,000 students
See also
*New England Colle ...
, Australia, carried out the experimental replication of the entire Kikkuli Text over the 7-month period prescribed in the text with Arabian horses. The results are published in "The Kikkuli Method of Horse Fitness Training," in which Nyland claims Kikkuli's methods to be, in some ways, superior to its modern counterparts.
Surviving texts
#
CTH CTH or cth may refer to
* CTH Public Company Limited, Thai cable and satellite TV company
* Calum Thomas Hood
* Chalmers University of Technology
* Honduras Workers' Confederation - Confederación de Trabajadores de Honduras
* China General Aviati ...
284, best preserved, Late Hittite copy (13th century BCE)
#CTH 285, contemporary Middle Hittite copy with a ritual introduction
#CTH 286, contemporary Middle Hittite copy
CTH 284 consists of four well preserved tablets or a total of 1080 lines. The text is notable for its Mitanni (
Indo-Aryan) loanwords, e.g. the numeral compounds ''aika-'', ''tera-'', ''panza-'', ''satta-'', ''nāwa-wartanna'' ("one, three, five, seven, nine intervals", Kikkuli apparently was faced with some difficulty getting specific Mitannian concepts across in the Hittite language, for he frequently gives a term such as "Intervals" in his own language and then states, "this means..." and explained it in Hittite. An alternatice explanantion is that at the time the treatise was written these terms were no longer in general use but were employed out of tradition hence needing a gloss.
[Drews, Robert. "Chapter Seven: PIE Speakers and the Beginnings of Chariot Warfare". The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East, Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2018, pp. 136-157]
See also
*
''On Horsemanship'' (Xenophon)
*
Amarna letters
The Amarna letters (; sometimes referred to as the Amarna correspondence or Amarna tablets, and cited with the abbreviation EA, for "El Amarna") are an archive, written on clay tablets, primarily consisting of diplomatic correspondence between t ...
References
Literature
*A. Kammenhuber, ''Hippologia hethitica'' (1962) ISBN 9783447004978
*E. Masson, L’art de soigner et d’entrainer les chevaux, texte Hittite du maitre écuyer Kikkuli (Lausanne: Favre, 1998) 43–108
*Ann Nyland, ''The Kikkuli Method of Horse Training'', Kikkuli Research, Armidale, 1993. ISBN 9780646131603
*Ann Nyland, ''The Kikkuli Method of Horse Training: 2009 Revised Edition'', Maryannu Press, Sydney, 2009. ISBN 9780980443073
*Peter Raulwing, "Zur etymologischen Beurteilung der Berufsbezeichnung assussanni des Pferdetrainers Kikkuli von Mittani", Anreiter et al. (eds.), ''Man and the Animal World, Studies in Archaeozoology, Archaeology, Anthropology and Paleolinguistics in memoriam S. Bökönyi'', Budapest (1996), 1-57.
*Raulwing, Peter. 2005. The Kikkuli text: Hittite training instructions for chariot horses in the second half of the 2nd millennium B.C. and their interdisciplinary context. Les équidés dans le monde méditerranéen antique: Actes du colloque organisé References 1029 par l’École française d’Athènes, le Centre Camille Jullian, et l’UMR 5140 du CNRS, Athènes, 26–28 Novembre 2003, ed. by Armelle Gardeisen, 61–75. Lattes: Association pour le développement de l’archéologie en Languedoc-Rousillon.
*Frank Starke, ''Ausbildung und Training von Streitwagenpferden, eine hippologisch orientierte Interpretation des Kikkuli-Textes'',
StBoT 41 (1995).
External links
Kikkuli, 1345 BCE: Training the Chariot Horse (English translation by Anthony Dent from French) Wayback machine: https://web.archive.org/web/20120902061951/http://imh.org/history-of-the-horse/legacy-of-the-horse/harnessing-the-horse/kikkuli-1345.html
Raulwing, Peter (2009). The Kikkuli Text. Hittite Training Instructions for Chariot Horses in the Second Half of the 2nd Millennium B.C. and Their Interdisciplinary Context
{{Authority control
Hittite people
Hittite texts
Horse management
Indo-European warfare
Classical horsemanship
Chariots
14th-century BC people
Writers on horsemanship